Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2013
Spatiotemporal Modeling of Swedish Scots Pine Stands
Cronie O; Nystrom K; Yu JAbstract
The growth-interaction (GI) process is used for the spatiotemporal modeling of measurements of locations and radii at breast height made at three different time points of the individual trees in 10 Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) plots from the Swedish National Forest Inventory. The GI process places trees at random locations in the study region and assigns sizes to the trees, which interact and grow with time. It has been used to model plots in previous studies and to improve the fit we suggest some modifications: a different location assignment strategy and a different open-growth (growth under negligible competition) function. We believe that the calibration data contain trees that are too small to reflect the open growth properly, which primarily affects the carrying capacity parameter. To better represent the open growth of Scots pines, we evaluate the open growth from a separate set of data (size and age measurements of older and larger single Scots pines). A linear relationship is found between the plot's estimated site indices and the sizes, and this is exploited in the estimation of the carrying capacity. We finally estimate the remaining GI process parameters and test the goodness of fit on simulated predictions from the fitted model.Keywords
goodness of fit; open growth; Richards growth function; Scots pines; spatiotemporal point processPublished in
Forest Science2013, volume: 59, number: 5, pages: 505-516
Authors' information
Cronie, Ottmar
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Resource Management
Yu, Jun
Umeå University
Yu, Jun
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Economics
UKÄ Subject classification
Probability Theory and Statistics
Forest Science
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5849/forsci.12-007
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/51574